Miscellaneous News

vincent

Grumpy Old Man
Staff member
Moderator - World Affairs
Hong Koners don't feel Han and you can ask any of them and the answer will be the same. CPC's nightmare and the only reason why they're still sending Han people all over the continental China to become a stable 'majority'. This isn't the only place with the same feeling of strong city/region before country identification 'disorder'. People coming from biggest cities like Shanghai or Guangzhou have the same 'disorder'. Anyone knows that and that's the biggest threat to PRC.

Those who write that 'you can't understand China' are right in the same way that if you were born and rised in the 'West' you won't understand the term Homo sovieticus.

I grew up among HKers and i can speak Cantonese. I can tell you they used to discriminate poor savage villagers, i.e. Mainlanders. They were pretty open about it too. Now the table has turn and they are the one who are poorer and have less economic opportinities. They resent that and the resentment is the major source of their drive for greater independence
 
Hong Koners don't feel Han and you can ask any of them and the answer will be the same. CPC's nightmare and the only reason why they're still sending Han people all over the continental China to become a stable 'majority'. This isn't the only place with the same feeling of strong city/region before country identification 'disorder'. People coming from biggest cities like Shanghai or Guangzhou have the same 'disorder'. Anyone knows that and that's the biggest threat to PRC.

Those who write that 'you can't understand China' are right in the same way that if you were born and rised in the 'West' you won't understand the term Homo sovieticus.

Specifically you don't know what you are talking about and you are making up convoluted conspiracy theories based on your anti-China and anti-CCP hatred. China has wealth and opportunity gap issues across multiple societal divides, societal unwillingness or inability to address these issues get mixed with prejudices and have been reflected in radical politics such as the Hong Kong Occupy Central/umbrella movement protesters and independence supporters. This is a set of problems many countries are currently struggling with such as the contentious Brexit from the EU and the acrimonious presidential race and daily party politics in the US.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
ENOUGH of the politics and cultural and national arguments and degrading of one another.

This is not what SD is about.

Any more such arguments and comments will be deleted and those posting them will receive warnings...and if that does not stop it, they those posting such things will be suspended from SD for several weeks.

DO NOT RESPOND TO THIS MODERATION.
 
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kwaigonegin

Colonel
40 years ago almost to the day something happened that shook the military world. The 'event' ... 'it' ended up being a paper tiger (clue).

any military history buff wants to take a poke? not too hard :)
I can give you a more hints if you're stuck but no googling!
 
40 years ago almost to the day something happened that shook the military world. The 'event' ... 'it' ended up being a paper tiger (clue).

any military history buff wants to take a poke? not too hard :)
I can give you a more hints if you're stuck but no googling!
I noticed, ignored :) but now visited another site and
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LOL!
so, the winner is ...
 

SinoSoldier

Colonel
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has carried out its 5th nuclear test its neighbours confirmed on Friday after an explosion caused an earthquake in the north east of the country.

The US Geological Survey said it had recorded a 5.3 seismic event near the site of the North’s nuclear testing facility.

The news sparked immediate concern in the region, with
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announcing that its prime minister would preside over an emergency national security council meeting.


President Park Geun-hye said that the North’s test showed the country’s leader Kim Jong-un was guilty of “maniacal recklessness” in completely ignoring the world’s call to abandon his pursuit of nuclear weapons.

Japan’s prime minister, Shinzo Abe, called for an emergency meeting of the UN security council, pending confirmation that the earthquake was indeed a nuclear test.

Abe said evidence pointed to the possibility that the quake had not occurred naturally. “If it turns out that North Korea has carried out a nuclear test, that is something we cannot tolerate,” he told reporters.

Japan’s top government spokesman, Yoshihide Suga, said: “Given similar cases in the past, we think (the earthquake) may have been a nuclear test.”

The two countries later confirmed that they had determined that the earthquake had been caused by the detonation of a nuclear device.

Japan’s defence ministry has reportedly dispatched aircraft to analyse air samples to see if any radiation could be detected. So far three, three T-4 aircraft, which are usually used to train fighter pilots, have been deployed, sources told Reuters.

CCTV, China’s state broadcaster, reported that the country’s department of environmental protection had launched a level-two emergency response to the suspected test. Nuclear radiation monitoring was being carried out along China’s northeastern border with North Korea it said.

Meanwhile the United States National Security Council spokesperson Ned Price said: “We are aware of seismic activity on the Korean Peninsula in the vicinity of a known North Korean nuclear test site. We are monitoring and continuing to assess the situation in close coordination with our regional partners.”

The seismic event took place at 9.30am local time and occurred at ground level. Naturally occurring earthquakes strike below ground. Its epicentre was 18km east-north-east of Sungjibaegam, the USGS said.

The magnitude of the seismic event would indicate a device with a 20 to 30 kilotonne yield, an analyst said, the largest yield estimate yet of a North Korean nuclear device.

“That’s the largest DPRK test to date, 20-30kt, at least. Not a happy day,” Jeffrey Lewis of the California-based Middlebury Institute of International Studies told Reuters, using the North’s official title of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

“Yield estimates are always kind of approximate. The point is that it is the biggest one to date unless they revise the yield downward.”

Three days ago the North Korean leader,
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said his military should continue nuclear weapons development after another round of test-firing of ballistic missiles.


The North Korean KCNA news agency
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: “He stressed the need to continue making miraculous achievements in bolstering up the nuclear force one after another in this historic year.”


If confirmed, the timing of Friday’s test is significant as it would coincide with the 68th anniversary of the country’s founding by Kim Il-sung, the grandfather of the current leader, Kim Jong-un.

Two months ago, U.S.-based 38 North, a North Korea monitoring project, said satellite images showed a high level of activity at North Korea’s nuclear test site, called Punggye-ri.

Speculation had intensified that North Korea may conduct a fifth nuclear test after the United States blacklisted Kim on 6 July for human rights abuses.

North Korea conducted its fourth nuclear test in January, resulting in tough new UN sanctions. It has conducted a series of missile tests this year, including a submarine-launched missile.

More follows.

The quick-n'-rough lowdown:

- Time: 00:30:1 UTC (9:00:1 local time), September 8, 2016
- Location: 19 km East-Northeast of Sungjibaegam
- Yield: at least 6 kt (Japanese sources); up to 20-30 kt (US sources)
- Seismological events: 5.3 magnitude earthquake (
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)


The test is believed to be part of a series of experiments aimed at miniaturizing North Korea's nuclear warheads, for possible integration with the new
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and
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.


Map of the test location:
991.jpg
990.jpg
 
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SouthernSky

Junior Member
20-30kt, unannounced, and a 5.3 magnitude event.

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is going to lead N. Korea and other nations into some VERY BAD situations and places.

He is even worse than his father.

It's staggering that someone so young has access to nuclear weapons, without any apparent checks or balances it would seem.
 

SouthernSky

Junior Member
Peace process takes a step forward in Syria? I'll remain skeptical at this stage.

The United States and Russia hailed a breakthrough deal on Saturday to put Syria's peace process back on track, including a nationwide truce effective from sundown on Monday, improved humanitarian aid access and joint military targeting of banned Islamist groups.

"Today, Sergei Lavrov and I, on behalf of our presidents and our countries, call on every Syrian stakeholder to support the plan that the United States and Russia have reached, to ... bring this catastrophic conflict to the quickest possible end through a political process," U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry told a news conference after marathon talks in the Swiss city.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said that despite continuing mistrust, the two sides had developed five documents that would revive a failed truce agreed in February and enable military coordination between the U.S. and Russia against militant groups in Syria.

Both sides agreed not to release the documents publicly.

"This all creates the necessary conditions for resumption of the political process, which has been stalling for a long time," Lavrov told a news conference.

The deal followed talks that stretched late into Friday night and several failed attempts to hammer out a deal over the past two weeks. The announcement on Friday was delayed as Kerry and U.S. negotiators consulted with officials in Washington.

"The Obama administration, the United States, is going the extra mile here because we believe that Russia, and my colleague (Lavrov), have the ability to press the Assad regime to stop this conflict and to come to the table and make peace," he said.

Previous efforts to forge agreements to stop the fighting and deliver humanitarian aid to besieged communities in Syria have crumbled within weeks, with the United States accusing Assad's forces of attacking opposition groups and civilians.


U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov look toward one another during a press conference following their meeting in Geneva, Switzerland where they discussed the crisis in Syria September 9, 2016. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

Kerry said the "bedrock" of the new deal was an agreement that the Syrian government would not fly combat missions in an agreed area on the pretext of hunting fighters from the banned Nusra Front, an al-Qaeda affiliate in Syria.

"That should put an end to the barrel bombs, and an end to the indiscriminate bombing, and it has the potential to change the nature of the conflict."

Under the agreement, Russian-backed government forces and opposition groups, supported by the United States and Gulf States, would halt fighting for a while as a confidence building measure. During this time, opposition fighters will have the chance to separate from militant groups in areas, such as Aleppo, where they have become intermingled.

"WE MUST GO AFTER THESE TERRORISTS," KERRY SAYS

If the truce holds from Monday, Russia and the United States will begin seven days of preparatory work to set up a "joint implementation center", where they will share information to delineate territory controlled by Nusra and opposition groups.

Both warring sides would pull back from the strategic Castello Road in Aleppo to create a demilitarized zone, while opposition and government groups would both have to provide safe and unhindered access via Ramouseh in the south of the city.

"We must go after these terrorists," Kerry said. "Not indiscriminately, but in a strategic, precise and judicious manner so they cannot continue to use the regime's indiscriminate bombing to rally people to their hateful crimes."

All sides in the conflict would need to adhere to the nationwide truce, Kerry added, cautioning opposition fighters that if they did not separate from Nusra they would not be spared from air attacks.

"This requires halting all attacks, including aerial bombardments, and any attempts to gain additional territory at the expense of the parties to the cessation. It requires unimpeded and sustained humanitarian access to all of the besieged and hard-to-reach areas including Aleppo."

Pentagon and U.S. intelligence officials have spoken out against the idea of closer military cooperation with Russia, in particular the sharing of locations of opposition groups that have fought to topple Assad.

U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter, who only days ago delivered a forceful speech in England criticizing Russia, has long been skeptical of Moscow's intentions in Syria.

The Pentagon said in a statement it would carefully monitor the "preliminary understanding" agreed on Friday and cautioned the Assad regime and its backer, Russia, to stick to deal requirements.

"Those commitments must be fully met before any potential military cooperation can occur," Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said. "We will be watching closely the implementation of this understanding in the days ahead."

The United States and Russia have backed opposite sides in Syria's civil war, with few signs of an end in sight to more than five years of conflict, which killed more than 400,000 people and drove tens of thousands of refugees into Europe.

The United Nations said on Friday the Syrian government had effectively stopped aid convoys this month and the besieged city of Aleppo was close to running out of fuel, making the talks even more urgent.

The U.N. special envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura, welcomed the announcement, saying in a statement that it had provided "clear rules" for a cessation of hostilities and would allow warring sides to resume political talks on a transition.

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